Even the world’s richest women beg, steal or borrow to lay their hands on the elusive handbag made by Hermès, which officially has a waiting list of two to three years.

No doubt they will be salivating over the new creations the French fashion house unveiled recently during its Fall 2008 ready-to-wear show, held in a tent beside the Eiffel Tower.

They included the So Kelly, an oblong variation on the classic Kelly bag, and the Gypsy, a unisex shoulder bag modeled by Hermès designer Jean Paul Gaultier himself.

Models with glossy manes paraded in belted fringed shawls and knee-high suede boots that gave them the superior carriage of high-class thoroughbreds.

“That Birkin on your arm tells other women your place in society,” said Michael Tonello, who recounts his adventures buying and selling Birkin bags in his forthcoming memoir “Bringing Home the Birkin” (William Morrow, $25.95).

“It sort of suggests to them that you are successful, that you have money, that you are someone, or else Hermès wouldn’t be selling you this bag,” he added.

Celebrities who have adopted the handbag, named after British actress Jane Birkin, include Martha Stewart, Eva Longoria and Katie Holmes. Victoria Beckham is said to own 100.

Though prices start at more than $8,000, hundreds of women languish on the waiting list. So when Tonello found a way of bypassing the wait, he rocketed to the top of every socialite’s Rolodex.

“I began to feel like I was a drug dealer,” he says. “You know, there are people that will do almost anything to get one of these bags.”

Tonello spent nearly a decade traveling the world snapping up Birkins – he says he once purchased 140 in three months – and reselling them on eBay for a tidy profit. He said he stopped because the activity was taking over his life.

Officials at Hermès declined to comment on the book, due to be published in the United States in April, and on the thriving secondary market for its high-end goods.

Otto Warmbier was arrested in January 2016 at the end of a brief tourist visit to North Korea. He had been medically evacuated and was being treated at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center when he died at age 22.